You are on page 1of 26

YOGA

Yoga Practice Goals


Goals for this class:
Find enjoyment and success in physical activity
Improve physical fitness and health
Develop self-awareness, self-control, focus and
concentration
Develop self-esteem and understanding for each other
Enhance mental and emotional stability and well being
Inspire each other to establish and maintain a lifetime
of wellness
Facilitate the transference of yoga education and tools
into life skills.
Objectives
Basic body mechanics, alignment and proper posture
Holding postures and stretches with grace
Center, integrate, and balance themselves
Regulate breathing in challenging situations
Focus on a given task
Slow down and connect with movements
Balance effort and receptivity
Release tension and stress
Maintain and improve cardiovascular health
Formulate and accomplish self-created goals
Make positive choices that respect and support yourself and
others
Tolerate conflicts and compassionately resolve them.

History
Yoga is a profound
system of holistic
health which
originated in India
over 5,000 years
ago.
It was first put into
written form as the
Yoga Sutras.
The author was
Patanjali.
Statue of Patnjali
MAJOR BRANCHES OF YOGA
Karma Yoga: the way of right action,
serving without the motivation of obtaining
the results of labor.
Bhakti Yoga: the way of devotion, devotion
to a supreme being absorbing the emotions
and self in pure love.
Jnana Yoga: the way of knowledge,
studying god and learning to discriminate
between illusion and the reality that all is
god.
Hatha Yoga: the physical path, using the
body through asana and pranayama to
control the mind and senses.
Tantric Yoga: the feminine path,
worshiping the goddess energy and seeing
the body as the temple of the divine.
Kundalini Yoga: the path of energy,
arousing the energy stored in the chakras
through breathing and movement.
Raja Yoga: the path of meditation,
controlling the mind from wandering and
obtaining mastery over thought.

HATHA YOGA
Outside of India, the term Yoga usually
refers to Hatha Yoga and its various types
Iyengar (physical alignment)
Bikram (Hot Yoga)
Astanga (set series of poses intense)
Power (vigorous fitness based)
Physical Benefits
Yoga creates a toned, flexible, and strong body in order
to improve respiration, energy, and vitality. It helps to
maintain a balanced metabolism, promotes cardio and
circulatory health and relieve pain. It also helps you look
and feel younger than your age while improving your
athletic performance.
Mental Benefits
Yoga helps you relax and
handle stressful situations
more easily. It teaches
you how to quiet the mind
so you can focus your
energy where you want it
to go into a difficult
yoga pose, on the tennis
court or golf course, or in
the office. Yoga
encourages positive
thoughts and self-
acceptance.
Spiritual Benefits
Yoga builds awareness of your body, your
feelings, the world around you, and the needs of
others. It promotes an interdependence between
mind, body, and spirit and helps you live the
concept of oneness.
YOGA POSITIONS
Sit/Easy Position - Sukhasana

Sit cross-legged with your
hands on your knees.
Focus on your breath.
Keep your spine straight
and push your sit bones
down into the floor.
Take 5-10 slow, deep
breaths. On the next
inhale, raise your arms
over your head. Exhale
and bring your arms
down slowly.
Repeat 5-7 times.
Dog and Cat
Increases flexibility of spine. This is really two poses, one flowing into
the other.
Begin on your hands and knees.
Keep your hands just in front of your shoulders, your legs about hip
width apart.
As you inhale, tilt the tailbone and pelvis up, and let the spine curve
downward, dropping the stomach low, and lift your head up. Stretch
gently.
As you exhale, move into cat by reversing the spinal bend, tilting the
pelvis down, drawing the spine up and pulling the chest and stomach
in.
Repeat several times, flowing smoothly from dog into cat, and cat
back into dog.
Resting Pose
Childs Pose
If you need to take a break, childs pose one
of the resting poses you may use.

Begin in table kneeling position
From table. widen knees, bend forward at
the waist with arms stretched forward
Sun Salutation
The Sun Salutation Pose, also
known as Salute to the Sun and
Surya Namaskar, is a flowing
series of 12 poses which help
improve strength and flexibility of
the muscles and spinal column.

This pose also warms up the
body and tones the abdominal
muscles. So take your time and
learn how to perform the Yoga
Sun Salutation Pose with the
help of our easy-to-follow steps.


Stand with feet together, hands at your sides,
eyes looking forward.

Push into the floor with your feet and raise
your legs, first the calves and then the thighs.
Breathe. Hold the posture, but try not to
tense up. Breathe.
As you inhale, imagine the breath coming up
through the floor.
Reverse the process on the exhale and
watch your breath as it passes down from
your head, through your chest and stomach,
legs and feet.
Hold for 5 to 10 breaths.
Hands Up

Inhale and raise the arms
upward. Slowly bend
backward, stretching arms
above the head.

Head To Knees

Exhale slowly bending
forward, touching the
earth with respect
until the hands are in
line with the feet,
head touching knees.
Lunge
Inhale and move the right
leg back away from the
body in a wide backward
step.

Keep the hands and feet
firmly on the ground, with
the left foot between the
hands.

Raise the head.

Downward Dog

While exhaling, bring the
left foot together with
the right.

Keep arms straight, raise
the hips and align the
head with the arms,
forming an upward
arch.

Stick

Exhale and slowly the
body as if coming
down from a push up.
Only your hands and
feet should touch the
floor.
Upward Dog

Inhale and slowly
raise the head and
bend backward as
much as possible,
bending the spine to
the maximum

Downward Dog
While exhaling,
bring the left
foot together
with the right.
Keep arms
straight, raise
the hips and align
the head with the
arms, forming an
upward arch

Lunge
Inhale and move the
right leg back away
from the body in a
wide backward step.
Keep the hands and
feet firmly on the
ground, with the left
foot between the
hands .
Raise the Head
Head to Knees

Exhale slowly
bending forward,
touching the
earth with
respect until the
hands are in line
with the feet,
head touching
knees.
Hands Up

Inhale and raise the
arms upward. Slowly
bend backward,
stretching arms above
the head.




Stand facing the
direction of the sun with
both feet touching.
Bring the hands
together, palm-to-palm,
at the heart.
Corpse Pose - Savasana
To get to corpse pose, sit
with fee flat on the floor. Lay
back and hug knees into
body. Gently rock side to
side. Release the arms to the
floor and stretch legs out.
Turn the palms up and
breath

You might also like